Publications of Henrik Brumm
All genres
Journal Article (72)
21.
Journal Article
26 (22), pp. R1173 - R1174 (2016)
Traffic noise drowns out great tit alarm calls. Current Biology 22.
Journal Article
6 (17), pp. 6151 - 6159 (2016)
Airport noise predicts song timing of European birds. Ecology and Evolution 23.
Journal Article
3 (7), 160231 (2016)
Anthropogenic noise, but not artificial light levels predicts song behaviour in an equatorial bird. Royal Society Open Science 24.
Journal Article
27 (5), pp. 1277 - 1278 (2016)
A meta-analytic castle built on sand? A comment on Roca et al. Behavioral Ecology 25.
Journal Article
5, 18556 (2015)
Linking the sender to the receiver: Vocal adjustments by bats to maintain signal detection in noise. Scientific Reports 26.
Journal Article
6, 8978 (2015)
Universal mechanisms of sound production and control in birds and mammals. Nature Communications 27.
Journal Article
105, pp. 289 - 295 (2015)
Why birds sing loud songs and why they sometimes don't. Animal Behaviour 28.
Journal Article
25 (5), pp. 1033 - 1034 (2014)
Fish struggle to be heard – but just how much fin waving is there? Behavioral Ecology 29.
Journal Article
6, pp. 55 - 85 (2013)
O Canto do Uirapuru: Consonant intervals and patterns in the song of the musician wren. Journal of Interdisciplinary Music Studies 30.
Journal Article
280 (1754), 20122798 (2013)
Bird song and anthropogenic noise: Vocal constraints may explain why birds sing higher-frequency songs in cities. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 31.
Journal Article
24 (1), pp. 25 - 38 (2012)
Biomusic and popular culture: The use of animal sounds in the music of the Beatles. Journal of Popular Music Studies 32.
Journal Article
7 (12), e51881 (2012)
Juvenile Galapagos pelicans increase their foraging success by copying adult behaviour. PLoS One 33.
Journal Article
7 (8), e43259 (2012)
Rock sparrow song reflects male age and reproductive success. PLoS One 34.
Journal Article
180 (1), pp. 146 - 152 (2012)
Effect sizes and the integrative understanding of urban bird song (A reply to Slabbekoorn et al.). American Naturalist 35.
Journal Article
26 (4), pp. 801 - 812 (2012)
Zebra finch song reflects current food availability. Evolutionary Ecology 36.
Journal Article
118 (2), pp. 197 - 202 (2012)
Song amplitude of rival males modulates the territorial behaviour of great tits during the fertile period of their mates. Ethology 37.
Journal Article
8 (6), pp. 913 - 916 (2012)
On the evolution of noise-dependent vocal plasticity in birds. Biology Letters 38.
Journal Article
84 (4), pp. E1 - E9 (2012)
On the relationship between, and measurement of, amplitude and frequency in birdsong. Animal Behaviour 39.
Journal Article
22 (2), pp. 310 - 316 (2011)
Song amplitude affects territorial aggression of male receivers in chaffinches. Behavioral Ecology 40.
Journal Article
81 (3), pp. 653 - 659 (2011)
Singing direction as a tool to investigate the function of birdsong: An experiment on sedge warblers. Animal Behaviour